FATHOM’s early adoption of the Stratasys Continuous Build 3D Demonstrator, a modular, automated FDM 3D manufacturing system with interconnected, high- throughput capabilities, is their solution. “This system is going to enable us to sell higher - volume FDM parts for AM application because it’s going to push the barrier of number of parts we can sell competitively,” said Stump. “Our opportunity here is setting up these modules for 1,000-plus parts, which I’m confident we can get to. Maybe even higher,” adds Stump. “And that’s just comparing apples to apples from a cost standpoint; that’s not taking into account designing for more function.” The manufacturer currently has a rack of six modules in their Oakland facility and Stump says this is only the beginning.
“This new Demonstrator is enabling us to look to the future where our production center could look like a 3D printing server farm, where there’s just rows and rows of Stratasys Demonstrators. That’s where our minds are going because the FDM-based technology is that good from a design and cost standpoint.” The team at FATHOM is extremely excited about the opportunity this Continuous Build Demonstrator brings to drive scale and growth for its AM business. “It meets our customer’s demand for high-quality FDM parts in greater quantities within shorter lead times and is more cost-effective.”
Having the Demonstrator in house lets FATHOM’s customers change design without penalty, tackle multiple jobs in parallel without downtime as well as automatically manage job requests. “This Demonstrator has the ability to take what’s already working at FATHOM and push the limits of additive manufacturing,” said Stump. One of their customers, Intel, worked with the team of advanced manufacturing experts at FATHOM to help design and fabricate Spider Bots for their keynote address at its annual developer’s conference. The complex project highlighted FATHOM’s cost-effective design and manufacturing capabilities, one with many design iterations during production. In the end, the Spider Bots produced by FATHOM were comprised of more than 9700 3D printed parts. “If we’d molded those parts it would have cost approximately $400,000 and taken a few months. With 3D printing, we were able to complete the entire project in five weeks, charging Intel just $116,000,” said Stump.
“The
demand for tool-less manufacturing is ever increasing. Designers and engineers want even
greater design freedom and faster speeds so
the opportunity with the new Demonstrator is
significant.”
Scalability is another factor the Demonstrator
addresses for FATHOM. “With the growing
adoption of direct digital manufacturing, more of
our customers are placing these types of end-use orders.
All it takes is a few of our customers
to submit just-in-time orders at once for our
machines to max out on capacity,” said Stump.
“The ability to be flexible with this new system,
adding more as needed, is really great.”
With the Continuous Build 3D Demonstrator, a
total disruption of the supply chain is possible for
just-in-time parts. “Customers can request what
they need in their MRP system when they need
it and inventory is available on time, every time,
just-in-time.”